Michael Irvin tries to clarify what was said in Tom Brady-Tyrann Mathieu exchange after seeing mic’d-up footage

But that footage never aired.

During the first half of Sunday’s Super Bowl LV, Chiefs safety Tyrann Mathieu got into a heated exchange with Tom Brady.

Even in the moments after trash-talking exchange, Mathieu was visibly upset on the Chiefs sidelines. And on Monday, Mathieu said that Brady called him something that he “won’t repeat” in a now-deleted tweet.

ESPN would later report that Brady reached out to Mathieu to apologize in a lengthy text.

But still, the entire ordeal begged the question as to what exactly was said. And Michael Irvin — who evidently had access to the mic’d-up footage as part of Showtime’s Inside The NFL — wanted to make it clear that Brady didn’t direct racist language at Mathieu.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VACxv9B8hMY

Irvin said:

“You’ll see it tonight. What everybody wants to hear, they’ll play some of that footage also — that battle between Tom Brady and Tyrann Mathieu and all of those things. That will be played. Absolutely. I’m gonna tell you this. I didn’t like that Tyrann Mathieu put that out like that. The way he put it out … It makes it sound as if — it makes people wanna know what he said. We’re curious as if he said the N-word. And he did not. Tom did not. I don’t even like that looming over this situation. We should clean that up someway, somehow.”

Now, the full, mic’d-up episode of Inside The NFL did air Tuesday night on Showtime, and the exchange oddly wasn’t included in the episode at all.

It’s unclear why that was cut out because Irvin definitely seemed to think it would be included.

For now, we’ll have to wait and see if that mic’d-up footage ever gets released.

Michael Irvin says Giants need to sign Kenny Golladay

Michael Irvin says the New York Giants must sign wide receiver Kenny Golladay in free agency.

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The New York Giants will be seeking offensive playmakers this offseason in both free agency and in the NFL draft. They are expected to use the No. 11 overall pick on either a game-breaking wide receiver or Florida TE Kyle Pitts — if he’s still on the board.

They can, however, ease that need in free agency the month before by signing a No. 1 wideout. Former Dallas Cowboys Hall of Fame wide receiver and current NFL Network analyst, Michael Irvin, believes he has the perfect fit for the Giants in Detroit Lions wide receiver Kenny Golliday.

“They should absolutely you try to get that kid,” Irvin said recently. “I think he would make a huge difference and give the Giants something that they need from wide receiver position. Allen Robinson is another guy that may be coming, but a guy like Golladay would be big in New York.”

Robinson, of course, has been one of the most productive wide receivers in the NFL the past few seasons, first with Jacksonville and more recently with Chicago. He will be costly and many believe he could be a candidate for the franchise tag this year with the Bears if they can’t get him under contract.

Golladay is a big target, similar to Tampa Bay’s Mike Evans in style at 6-foot-4 and 218 pounds. He was a Pro Bowler in 2019, reeling in 65 passes for 1,190 yards and 11 touchdowns and had 1,063 yards on 70 catches in 2018.

Golladay will be in for a big pay day even though missed the majority of the 2020 season with hamstring and hip injuries.

“He appeared in five games in all, pacing for 80/1,352/8 in the four he was completely healthy for,” writes Rotoworld. “Golladay, 27, would prefer to test free agency and escape Detroit’s inevitable rebuild but will likely get reluctantly slapped with the franchise tag this offseason. If able to test the waters, he’ll likely garner a long-term deal in the range of $18-$20 million annually.”

That might be too rich for the Giants, who won’t have a ton of cap space to deal with this offseason.

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Michael Irvin puts Randy Moss on blast over Jerry Rice ranking

Michael Irvin questioned whether Randy Moss had something wrong with his mind for questioning whether Jerry Rice is the G.O.A.T.

There’s a full-blown, raging battle going on between Hall of Fame wide receivers.

Randy Moss’ comments on the Terrell Owens podcast that he was the greatest wideout of all-time and T.O. was second rankled Jerry Rice. Now, Dallas Cowboys Hall of Famer Michael Irvin has jumped into the fray, basically questioning Moss’ sanity.

“Jerry Rice is the greatest of all time,” Irvin said on 95.7 The Game’s “Damon, Ratto and Kolsky” show. “If anybody says anything other than that, they need to see some kind of doctor to examine his cranium. Period.”

Irvin is on firm turf as Rice’s statistics and resume stand far above those posted by any other wideout in NFL history.

“You gotta pay homage to what this man has done. … This shouldn’t even be a discussion,” Irvin said. “I got Jerry Rice up there with the greatest player ever, period. I don’t wanna hear wide receiver. I’m talking about period, of all time.

“This discussion should not be a discussion.”

So long as diva wide receivers have mouths, there is going to be a discussion, no matter how off-base their opining might be. It is what they do because their personalities are nothing short of art forms.

 

Cowboys are not happy about being flexed out of primetime for the Browns

Michael Irvin and Mike McCarthy are salty about being affiliated with a lousy team

The news that the Cleveland Browns were gaining another primetime game was met around most of the NFL nation as a positive. Flexing the Browns’ matchup with the New York Giants in Week 15 into the Sunday Night Football feature game rewards the up-and-coming Browns and their bevy of young stars.

It comes at the expense of the Dallas Cowboys. And the self-anointed “America’s Team” isn’t happy about it.

“Number one, I think it’s a reflection of where we are right now as a football team,” Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy said during the week. “I mean, these are the types of things that I guess happen when you’re not successful. We’re disappointed, make no bones about it.”

His Cowboys are 3-9 and in last place in the worst division in pro sports. The Browns beat the Cowboys, 49-38, in Dallas in Week 4.

Cowboys legend and Hall of Fame wide receiver Michael Irvin expressed his disgust on a radio interview in Dallas. Speaking on 105.3 The Fan, Irvin summed up the entitled mentality of Dallas fans.

“Can you imagine, man, the Dallas Cowboys flexed out for the Cleveland Browns? Honestly, that’s a new low. That’s just absolutely a new low,” Irvin said with contempt hissing in every syllable.

National radio host Jim Rome, an early enrollee on the Browns bandwagon, clapped back at all the Cowboys hullabaloo,

He wasn’t the only one, either:

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America’s Team: Cowboys 10 most memorable Thanksgiving Day games

With 52 Thanksgiving games on their resume, the Cowboys have plenty of holiday memories to choose from. Cowboys Wire picks out the 10 best.

America’s Team is as much a part of the All-American holiday as parade floats and candied yams. The Dallas Cowboys will host their 53rd Thanksgiving Day game in 2020. This season’s edition will mark the tenth time Dallas has welcomed their division rivals from Washington for the traditional late afternoon tilt. That’s the most of any Cowboys Thanksgiving opponent.

Over the years, the club’s Thanksgiving Day series has created some of pro football’s most memorable moments, including several chapters that are absolutely indelible within the Cowboys’ own storied history. To celebrate, Cowboys Wire takes a look back through the archives to dish out the ten quintessential Thanksgiving games that have meant the most to the team.

But the feast can’t be all deep-fried turkey and pumpkin pie; mixed in with some of the franchise’s most satisfying wins are also a few standout games that didn’t go Dallas’s way. Consider them the unpleasant cranberry sauce that your weird aunt brings every few years and makes you have at least a small helping of.

Cowboys News: Goodwin’s Steelers connection, team’s best QB/WR pairings

The latest edition of Cowboys news and notes, including potential top 5 draft options, rookie standouts, a free agency review, and more.

The Dallas Cowboys are entering their Week 10 bye with just a 2-7 record. There comes a time in every team’s season where they need to sit back and strategically analyze every decision they have to make from here on out. Our own K.D. Drummond did just that for Dallas, and he brings you 10 things the Cowboys should change when they return from the bye. Barring a miraculous turnaround, Dallas will be picking rather high in the 2021 NFL Draft; read who draft guru Dane Brugler thinks the Cowboys could target.

Despite the team record, there are a number of positive takeaways Cowboys fans can have from the first half of the season. Their most recent draft class is living up to the hype, with Trevon Diggs, CeeDee Lamb, Neville Gallimore, and Tyler Biadasz all looking like future building blocks for this Dallas roster. Plus, the Cowboys two best players, Zack Martin and DeMarcus Lawrence, are playing their way into potential All-Pro seasons again.

This edition of News and Notes, though, starts with a fantastic profile piece on special teams ace C.J. Goodwin. The star of the Cowboys’ punt return trickery last week against Pittsburgh might not be in the NFL at all if it weren’t for a job shoveling cow manure… and the extra attention shown by a Steelers icon.

Jerry Jones: Cowboys greats Aikman, Irvin ‘would be the first to know’ about effort

The Cowboys owner said his former stars know what they’re talking about, even as the two railed against the current team’s effort in 2020.

Two of the brightest stars in the Cowboys’ considerable firmament spoke out this week about a perceived lack of effort from the current crop of players wearing the silver and blue. It’s one thing for analysts like Dan Orlovsky or Emmanuel Acho to roll video clips and ding guys for not hustling to the ball on a play here or a play there. Even starting safety Xavier Woods admitted that he feels every man going full speed for every single snap simply isn’t possible.

But it’s quite another thing for Ring of Honor members and revered franchise icons Troy Aikman and Michael Irvin to publicly question the want-to of the Dallas Cowboys as a unit.

And the man with the final say-so doesn’t necessarily disagree.

“First of all, I respect where they’re coming from in terms of their ability to evaluate,” team owner Jerry Jones told Dallas radio station 105.3 The Fan during a phone interview Friday morning.

And evaluate Aikman did. The Hall of Fame quarterback said he didn’t see good effort during the 49-38 loss to the Browns, a game in which the Dallas defense allowed an all-time worst 307 rushing yards.

“To me, I’d be embarrassed as a player to put that kind of performance on film,” Aikman told Dallas radio station 96.7 KTCK The Ticket, as reported by USA Today‘s Jori Epstein. “That’s going to be seen by your peers for the rest of the season.”

“I didn’t see one guy on defense that I’d say had a good game,” the three-time Super Bowl champ added. “The last touchdown that Odell Beckham Jr. scored when they cut it to three points, [Dallas] had all the momentum. If they make a stop there defensively, they probably win the game.

“It’s just not very good.”

Aikman’s teammate and top receiving target was even more blunt speaking on-air with his current employer, NFL Network. The outspoken Irvin accused the Cowboys defense of giving up huge scoring days to opposing teams like they’re door prizes.

On Friday, effort was still a big buzzword during Jones’s radio interview. And while the owner didn’t go so far as to discount his former players’ opinions, he stressed- as coach Mike McCarthy did earlier in the week– that effort can be a tricky thing to adequately grade, especially by anyone who’s on the outside looking in.

“I would say that they [Aikman and Irvin] would be the first to know,” Jones said, “that when you look at a practice or a game, it would help your evaluation- it does help your evaluation; this is not to take away from them in any way- but our coach who said it: being on the sideline and knowing what you’re asking them to do and knowing some of the nuances of that particular play, the guys best suited to evaluate effort are usually the ones right down on the sidelines, the ones that are sitting there, aware before the ball is snapped, what the expectations are. And that really can give you the assessment of the effort, probably best.”

But the 77-year-old Jones allowed that Irvin knows more about effort than most, and that if the man they nicknamed “The Playmaker” sees a lack of effort, it’s worth paying attention to.

“His world is about passion, which is another way, in my mind, a colorful way, of talking about effort,” Jones told The K&C Masterpiece Show. “Michael Irvin, in the middle of two-a-days, the roughest part of all of football, padded two-a-days, you would see where he was in between practices, and he’d be down, with his pads on, in the heat of the day in Austin, Texas, out running with his pads on in between practices. Between practices!

“So when he talks about effort, I listen.”

Cowboys fans can only hope the current players have been listening, too, to all the chatter this week about effort.

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Dallas’ QB Dak Prescott speaks highly of Oklahoma’s CeeDee Lamb

Cowboys QB Dak Prescott spoke very highly of his newest receiver CeeDee Lamb on Wednesday

Former Oklahoma wideout CeeDee Lamb appears to be settling in nicely with his new team. Cowboys QB Dak Prescott spoke very highly of his newest receiver on Wednesday.

“Yeah, great guy, great athlete, great player,” he said. “Excited for his future, excited for now, excited for everything that he can bring this offense in many, many years to come. He’s very smart. He’s very talented, as I said, and he wants to learn.”

And Prescott is not the only one speaking out on Lamb’s behalf. Cowboys Legend Michael Irvin took to NFL Network on Tuesday and emphasized just how important Lamb can be to an already stellar Cowboys offense.

“What [the front office] did by adding CeeDee Lamb is akin to Kevin Durant being added to a 73-9 Warriors team,” Irvin said.

The Cowboys offense finished first in the NFL in yards per play last season (6.5). With Lamb now in the fold, there’s potential for a historically potent offensive unit.

For reference, the 2018 Chiefs clocked in at 6.8 yards per play, the highest mark of the decade.

In his last season in Norman, Lamb racked up 1327 yards and 14 touchdowns on 62 catches for a mind-boggling 21.4 yards per attempt. He also finished as a finalist for the Biletnikoff Award.

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On Juneteenth, DT Gerald McCoy asks Cowboys owner to ‘say something’

The Cowboys’ new defensive tackle is walking the walk on Juneteenth and asking new boss Jerry Jones to finally talk the talk.

Gerald McCoy is already showing himself to be a leader for the 2020 Dallas Cowboys, even though he has yet to set foot in the building. The six-time Pro Bowl defensive tackle, signed by the club in late March, is lending his voice to growing calls to make Juneteenth a national holiday. He called on his new Cowboys teammates to join him in a 2.5-mile walk on Friday, a show of solidarity with Opal Lee, the 92-year-old retired teacher who walked from her Fort Worth home all the way to the nation’s capital (two and a half miles at a time, in 2016 and again in 2019) in an attempt to get the date recognized officially.

But McCoy also had some words for his new boss, Cowboys team owner Jerry Jones, who has yet to weigh in publicly with a stance on the events that have gripped the country since the May 25 death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police.

Appearing on ESPN’s First Take on Friday to mark the occasion of Juneteenth, McCoy was asked about the deafening silence that has come from the owner of America’s Team.

“When you have a franchise as recognizable as the Cowboys, “McCoy said, “people listen when they speak up. And the owner, Jerry Jones- who is one of the most recognizable figures in sports history- when he speaks, everybody listens. Well, I think at this point in time, I feel it would be great to hear him say something positive, or say anything. I love what he’s been to the sport. He’s been excellent to the sport of football. He’s a Hall of Famer. But at this point, it’s bigger than football. We need him to speak up about life. This is about human beings and equal rights. And that’s not what’s happening. And it would be great to hear him say something. Anything.”

Jones has taken considerable heat for his uncharacteristic radio silence. Former Cowboys receiver Dez Bryant tweeted that he’d like to have seen Jones attend one of the many protests that followed Floyd’s death. 49ers cornerback Richard Sherman called out Jones as well, in comments to a San Francisco newspaper.

This week, First Take cohost Stephen A. Smith offered a scathing rant directed at Jones. The team made a mention of Juneteenth via their social media accounts and spotlighted former defensive end Greg Ellis’s theatrical production, “Juneteenth: The Stage Play.” But for Smith, a rabid Cowboys hater, it’s not the same as a formal statement from the man at the top.

“Even more disappointing” than Jones’s silence, Smith said, “is that I haven’t heard one single Dallas Cowboy call for Jerry Jones to speak on this issue. Where the hell are they?”

McCoy’s pointed comments 24 hours later may have come too late and too softly for Smith’s liking. But they were not, in fact, the only ones to have come from a Cowboys notable.

On June 3, quarterback Dak Prescott posted an eloquent series of messages via Instagram detailing his perspective and pledging $1 million in support of police training, education, and advocacy.

Running back Ezekiel Elliott was one of the players featured in the video directed at NFL commissioner Roger Goodell two weeks ago, prompting the commissioner to release a video response of his own condemning racism and admitting the league was wrong to not listen to players’ previous criticisms regarding the issue of race.

Several Cowboys, including Prescott, wide receiver Amari Cooper, Ring of Honor legend Emmitt Smith, former Cowboys defensive star DeMarcus Ware, and three-time Super Bowl offensive lineman Nate Newton were among the hundreds of sports notables who signed a letter supporting the end of qualified immunity for violent police officers.

Speaking with Rich Eisen, Hall of Fame wide receiver Michael Irvin shared personal stories of his own experiences with systemic racism and described it as a problem that “we have to root out.”

The Cowboys organization released a video, the first in a promised series, that, according the team website, “reflects the organization’s statement regarding the recent tragedies in our country while also disclosing interactions between the team, its players, and community leaders.”

And most recently, defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence pledged to join McCoy for local Opal’s Walk events on Friday and Saturday. The two and a half miles of the walk represent the two and a half years that Black Texans waited between the Emancipation Proclamation, which abolished slavery, and the day that message finally arrived in Galveston.

McCoy, who still has not met most of his new teammates or coaches face to face, clearly grasps the club’s unique place in the landscape of professional sports. His conversation with the First Take crew echoes remarks he made to ESPN that show his apparent willingness to use his newly-elevated profile to address the current climate alongside the Cowboys veterans who have already done so.

“You have the players, who have their own brand, but we’re all under the umbrella of the Dallas Cowboys,” McCoy said, per Todd Archer. “The Dallas Cowboys are the most recognized franchise in the world. They can get behind it, whether it’s the players or just being in the movement, period, and showing their support. It would be great to hear a statement from the Cowboys, great to hear a statement from Jerry Jones in support of everything that’s going on. Will that get me in trouble saying that? I don’t know, but the truth is it needs to be said. The problem is people are afraid to have the conversations.”

Gerald McCoy is talking the talk on racial inequality in America. And on Juneteenth, he’s also walking the walk.

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News: NFL redraft names 7 foundational Cowboys, which club has best OT combo?

Do the Cowboys have the best bookends in the game? Should Dak Prescott receive a level of back pay for being drafted where he did and not seeing the 10s of millions his draft classmates have already gotten?

The Dallas Cowboys sport one of the healthiest rosters across the NFL, but how quickly would owners jump at the chance in a fictional tear-it-down rebuild of the league? ESPN went about a rather comical exercise where every team started from scratch and there was comedy everywhere.

Meanwhile, do the Cowboys have the best bookends in the game? Should Dak Prescott receive a level of back pay for being drafted where he did and not seeing the 10s of millions his draft classmates have already gotten? All this and more in this edition of news and notes.

Re-drafting the NFL: We picked 128 foundational players across all 32 teams :: ESPN

Using the first-round draft order of the 2020 process, before any trades, each team was allowed four picks in a snake-like fantasy draft to start from scratch. Seven Cowboys made the cut.

9. QB Dak Prescott
48. OT Tyron Smith
60. RB Ezekiel Elliott
80. WR CeeDee Lamb
87. WR Amari Cooper
102. DE DeMarcus Lawrence
118. OG Zack Martin

La’el Collins was snubbed.

As for who is now on the new-look Cowboys? They were drafted by Todd Archer, who regrets not getting DeMarcus Lawrence in the third round and hoping he fell to the fourth. He didn’t.

Round 1 (17): Kyler Murray, QB
Round 2 (48): Tyron Smith, OT
Round 3 (81): Keenan Allen, WR
Round 4 (112): Maxx Crosby, DE


Best offensive tackle duos in the NFL ahead of the 2020 season :: Pro Football Focus

There are only a handful of teams blessed to have edge protection other clubs would drool over. Dallas is one of those fortunate squads, but are Smith and Collins the best in the game?

That honor goes to the New Orleans’ tandem of Terron Armstead and Ryan Ramczyk, but the Cowboys duo comes in second, according to PFF.


Michael Irvin says Cowboys owe Dak Prescott ‘back pay’ for ‘stealing’ four years of his career :: CBS Sports

The Playmaker told Rich Eisen last week that the Cowboys’ current quarterback deserves a record-setting payday, saying Prescott has been “perfect.” The fourth-round draft pick was such a steal that Irvin even jokingly announced to the team’s front office that “whatever he gets, he deserves, because you still owe him back pay.”



How a ‘rogue’ employee forced NFL, Goodell into new Black Lives Matter stance :: Yahoo Sports

The players’ video message to the NFL commissioner was powerful. The story of how that video came to be is simply incredible, with one NFL social employee convinced he would be fired during a Zoom call even as recorded messages of support from the league’s brightest stars were flooding his inbox.


CeeDee Lamb embraces legacy of Dallas Cowboys’ 88 club, wants to be a Hall of Famer :: Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Get to know the Cowboys’ electrifying first-round pick, from how Hurricane Katrina was the unlikely catalyst for starting his football career to why the rookie reached out to Michael Irvin within days of the draft, beating the surprised Hall of Famer to the punch on a phone call to talk shop.


UDFA Profile: New competition at fullback? :: The Mothership

Sewo Olonilua may give Jamize Olawale a run at both the best Scrabble name on the roster… and the starting fullback job. The undrafted free agent out of TCU may not be a shifty touchdown machine, but the 6-foot-3-inch, 240-pounder has shown skill for catching the ball out wide when needed.


10 Cowboys who need to step up for Dallas to take the next step in 2020 :: The Athletic

They’re not the glitziest names on the marquee, but they’re the guys who need to play lights out this season for Dallas to make the postseason. We’re talking guys like Dorance Armstrong, Xavier Woods, Chris Jones, and the two Connors.


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